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Life of Esther
Painting series by Sandro Botticelli / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Life of Esther or Scenes from the Story of Esther is the title of a series of six panel paintings by the Italian Renaissance painters Sandro Botticelli and Filippino Lippi, showing scenes from the story of Esther and produced in the 1470s. They originally decorated the sides of a pair of cassoni or marriage chests, the two long panels on the fronts, and the smaller ones on the ends. They are now split between five museums in Europe and Canada.[1]
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![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Filippino_Lippi_-_Esther_choisie_par_Assu%C3%A9rus_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg/640px-Filippino_Lippi_-_Esther_choisie_par_Assu%C3%A9rus_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg)
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/Botticelli_03_Louvre.jpg/640px-Botticelli_03_Louvre.jpg)
The authorship of the panels has been much discussed, without firm conclusions being reached. Many accounts divide the works between the two artists, either in terms of the different paintings, or different stages of the work, or both. After his father's death in 1469, Filippino Lippi completed his apprenticeship with Botticelli, and in 1472 was recorded as his assistant. Whether the panel known as La Derelitta, probably by Botticelli, and perhaps rather later than the others, forms part of the series, has also puzzled scholars. The figure is often thought to be female, and a scene of Mordecai weeping is already shown in the Louvre's wide panel.[2]
A recent (2010) study, based on infrared reflectography and x-ray images, shows differences between the style and techniques of the underdrawing, and also differences in the handling of the vanishing points in the perspective of the architecture. There may well have been more than two artists involved.[3] The author concludes that La Derelitta and The Triumph of Mordecai are entirely by Botticelli, and Esther at the Palace Gate perhaps entirely by Lippi. The two wide front panels suggest a design by Botticelli, and some underdrawing, but are probably mostly by Lippi, assisted by another painter in the draperies. Vashti Rejected may be painted by a third, less expert, painter after a cartoon by Botticelli.[4]